- June 23, 2009 • 10:00 am PDT
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1
Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
2
Don't Reinvent The Wheel, Steal It: An Urban Planning Award for Cities That Copy
3
Apple’s Brand Is at Stake as Customers Demand Better Labor Practices
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The Subway Falafel Sandwich and the Americanization of Ethnic Food
5
Want to Raise Young Leaders? Don't Hand Out Rewards So Easily
1
Most Americans Want a Walkable Neighborhood, Not a Big House
2
Give Komen the Pink Slip: Five Ways to Support Women's Health for All
3
Is Sweden's Classroom-Free School the Future of Learning?
4
What Would a Post-SOPA Internet Look Like?
5
A 375-Year-Old French Bank Forgives Debts of Paris' Poorest
1
Don't Reinvent The Wheel, Steal It: An Urban Planning Award for Cities That Copy
2
Apple’s Brand Is at Stake as Customers Demand Better Labor Practices
3
It's Time for Some Disruptive Innovation in Higher Education
5
Bad Girl: Does M.I.A. Live Up to Her Revolutionary Claims?
today's top stories from our friends at pitchfork
When you're popping potato chip after potato chip into your mouth, you wouldn't likely think about all the water that's expended during the...

The craziest (and maybe best) idea you'll ever hear for solving the world's drinking water shortage.

Anne Percoco's water bottle raft, "Indra's Cloud," appears in the show Convergence at Lumenhouse in Brooklyn, New York.

Dhaka, Bangladesh is running out of water, fast. So residents are turning to the sky for help.
According to the YouTube channel for the Deepwater Horizon Unified Command, "This video is from the larger of two existing leaks on the riser....

The marriage of two concepts that err on the side of sharing information. The recent publishing of the Afghan War Diary on WikiLeaks put that...
Last week, the explosion of an exploration oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico left the entire structure razed and 11 people missing. However, officials...

A new internet tip-line allows citizens to anonymously reach hundreds of local newspapers around America. Crazy haircut optional.

The company doesn't count the Deepwater Horizon spill because there's "no accurate determination" of how many gallons leaked.

Want to know what kind of marching orders the reporters get at Fox News? Media Matters got its hands on a leaked internal memo.
Looks like the bottled-water-as-accessory-of-the-evil thing has truly taken off (that, or the recession is making more people take to the tap)....
Enjoying bottled water is not as new a trend as many believe. In the Roman Empire, earthen jars filled with naturally carbonated water from...
So BP has finished building the first of three huge steel domes that it's hoping to drop down on top of the oil leaks on the ocean floor. Here's a...
In our ongoing effort here at GOOD (Casey's Crusade, as I like to call it) to make you feel slightly bad about drinking bottled water, and as...

A refreshing look into the peculiar origins of the carbon dioxide bubbles in our drinks.

At long last, the EPA has decided to limit the amount of perchlorate, a component of rocket fuel, in our drinking water.

One of the hazards of hydraulic fracturing could be a toxic food and water supply—and not just in the epicenter of the natural gas boom.

The financial bubble. The housing bubble. And now for a refreshingly different bubbly for the new year—free bubbly tap water.
News flash: People in America don't know jack. Or people do bad on science tests. Half full vs. half empty. Either way, in preparation for a new...